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Does the vagus nerve inform the brain about preclinical tumours and modulate them?

Does the vagus nerve inform the brain about preclinical tumours and modulate them?
Does the vagus nerve inform the brain about preclinical tumours and modulate them?
The inflammatory microenvironment is thought to play a pivotal part in tumorigenesis. But, can the brain be informed about peripheral preclinical cancer cells? Can it modulate tumour development? One of the key routes for information to reach the brain from visceral regions is through the vagus nerve. Yet, patients with ulcers who have had a vagotomy have been shown to die from cancer more frequently than do those who have not had this procedure, and surgical and chemical vagotomy attenuates tumour-induced anorexia and leads to enhanced tumour progression. We therefore postulate that the vagus nerve participates in informing the brain about tumorigenesis by transmiting information to the brain about tumour-associated proinflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, activation of the vagus could slow tumorigenesis by suppression of peripheral proinflammatory cytokines.

1470-2045
245-248
Gidron, Yori
56310d95-dcfd-4178-95f1-1b1049f4c1f7
Perry, Hugh
8f29d36a-8e1f-4082-8700-09483bbaeae4
Glennie, Martin
9f6f0eff-4560-48c2-80cd-0ec116110ded
Gidron, Yori
56310d95-dcfd-4178-95f1-1b1049f4c1f7
Perry, Hugh
8f29d36a-8e1f-4082-8700-09483bbaeae4
Glennie, Martin
9f6f0eff-4560-48c2-80cd-0ec116110ded

Gidron, Yori, Perry, Hugh and Glennie, Martin (2005) Does the vagus nerve inform the brain about preclinical tumours and modulate them? The Lancet Oncology, 6 (4), 245-248. (doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(05)70096-6). (PMID:15811620)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The inflammatory microenvironment is thought to play a pivotal part in tumorigenesis. But, can the brain be informed about peripheral preclinical cancer cells? Can it modulate tumour development? One of the key routes for information to reach the brain from visceral regions is through the vagus nerve. Yet, patients with ulcers who have had a vagotomy have been shown to die from cancer more frequently than do those who have not had this procedure, and surgical and chemical vagotomy attenuates tumour-induced anorexia and leads to enhanced tumour progression. We therefore postulate that the vagus nerve participates in informing the brain about tumorigenesis by transmiting information to the brain about tumour-associated proinflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, activation of the vagus could slow tumorigenesis by suppression of peripheral proinflammatory cytokines.

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Published date: April 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 169261
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/169261
ISSN: 1470-2045
PURE UUID: 56ebb5de-ff98-4734-aef7-c8c73ab46a65

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Date deposited: 13 Dec 2010 13:33
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:20

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Contributors

Author: Yori Gidron
Author: Hugh Perry
Author: Martin Glennie

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